Legendary character actor, Peter Lorre, was born Laszlo Lowenstein on Jun 26, 1904 in Rózsahegy, Hungary. Lorre appeared in over 110 film and TV roles. His best known films include the nine he appeared in with Sydney Greenstreet: The Maltese Falcon (1941), Casablanca (1942), Background to Danger (1943), Passage to Marseill (1944), The Mask of Dimitrios (1944), The Conspirators (1944), Hollywood Canteen (1944), Three Strangers (1946), and The Verdict (1946). He also starred in a series of eight Mr. Moto movies during the late 1930s, and branched out into comedy as Dr. Einstein in Frank Capra's classic Arsenic and Old Lace starring Cary Grant and Raymond Massey (1944). Lorre died at the age of 59 on Mar 23, 1964 in Los Angeles, CA and was laid to rest in Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, Los Angeles County, CA.

Early Life

Peter Lorre was born Laszlo Lowenstien on June 26th,
1904 in what then the city of Rozahegy in Austria-Hungary, now the country of
Slovakia. His was the first son of Jewish parents, Alajos and Elvira
Lowenstien. His father worked as bookkeeper at a textile mill and served as a
reserve officer for the Austro-Hungarian Army. Because of this, Alajos was
often away for much of young Peter's most formative years. In 1908, when he was just four years old,
Lorre's mother died of what appeared to be food poisoning. His father would
soon remarry with the task of raising his three sons proving too much for the man
to handle. Unfortunately for the young Peter, he and his stepmother would not
get along and soon he grew into alienated, solemn child. Thanks to his father's vocation, Lorre and his family were often on the move, living in different
areas of Europe including Romania, Vienna, Yugoslavia, and Austria. It was
during this time Lorre picked up an interest in acting and began appearing
local productions. He soon expressed his hopes of turning his interest into a
career, but was met with strong disapproval from his father. Lorre then went on
to business school then worked as a bank teller for a short time. He ultimately
let himself get fired from his banking position in order to pursue acting
full-time.

Early Career

His early years as an actor were far from easy. Vienna's economy was now in shambles thanks the after effects of World War One and
finding any job, let alone an acting gig, was exceedingly difficult. Tired of
sleeping on park benches, Lorre went looking for work in other parts of Europe,
including Germany, Poland, and Switzerland settling on Berlin in 1928. During
this time Lorre suffered a burst appendix and was forced to undergo surgery. He
was given morphine to help ease the pain and soon he developed a lifetime
addiction to the substance. In 1929 Lorre appeared in the Bertlot Brecht
productions Happy End and Man Equals Man and later that year made
his film debut with an uncredited role in
Die verschwundene Frau (My Missing
Wife). For the next couple years he continued to appear on the German stage
in productions such as Die
Unuberwindlichen and Die
Quadratur des Kreises before returning to the screen in 1931 with one of
his best remembered film, Fritz Lang's M.

Inspired by the real-life serial killer Peter Kurten, M told the story of Hans Beckert
(Lorre), a man with an unrelenting urge to kidnap and kill small children. The
role was an immense success and brought Lorre global admiration from the film
community while solidified Lorre's more sinister onscreen persona despite his
previous triumphs in comedy. He continued to act in Germany until 1933, when
the Nazi Party came to power. Being both Jewish and a creative intellectual,
Lorre felt it was only a matter of time before he was rounded up and sent to
prison. He was amongst the first wave of Jews to leave the country. He and his
fiancs, Celia, first went to Paris were Lorre acted in one film before
traveling to London on the request of Alfred Hitchcock. After seeing Lorre's performance in M, Hitchcock asked the
actor to play the political assassin in his 1934 film The Man Who Knew Too Much. Because Lorre wasn't able to speak
English at the time, Lorre was forced to learn most of his line phonetically.
The film met with rave reviews with much of the praise going to Lorre's daring
performance and soon after, Lorre was invited to take a trip west to try his
hand in Hollywood.

Hollywood

Upon his arrival in Hollywood in 1936, Lorre signed a
contract with Colombia pictures. He was immediately loaned to MGM studios for
the horror film Mad Love. Although
the film was a box office failure, many critics praised Lorre performance as
the sinister scientist, Dr. Gogol.Lorre next starred as Raskolnikov in the Josef von Sternberg's slightly
experimental silver screen adaption of Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment. The film was a failure both with at the box
office and in the trade papers, but Lorre bounced back quickly with another
Hitchcock collaboration, Secret Agent. In
1937 Lorre signed with Twentieth Century Fox and immediately began working on
his first film the company Crack Up. Soon
after, he began work on his next project playing the cunning Japanese
detective, Mr. Moto, in Think Fast, Mr.
Moto. Over the course of two years, Lorre would star in eight Mr. Moto films including Mr. Moto's Gamble, Mysterious Mr. Moto, Mr.
Moto's Last Warning and Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation. In 1938 Lorre turned down the leading role in Universal
Studio's Son of Frankenstein in hopes
of avoiding typecasting himself sinister roles. The next year Lorre would end
his contract at Fox due to their false promises and unfulfilled obligations to
his career.

Freelance Success

Now working as a freelance actor, Lorre had more control
over the trajectory of his career but was unable to rid himself from being
typecast as sinister characters. In 1940 he starred the B-movie Stranger on the Third Floor, playing the
films titular stranger. The film was set in an urban area, filmed with heavy
shadows, voice-narration, low camera angles and contained a morally obtuse
protagonist. Because of these traits it is considered by many to be first
film-noir prototype. His sinister streak would continue that year with the
release of The Face Behind the Mask. In
the film Lorre plays a gentle immigrant working in the U.S, who must turn to
life of crime after his face his burned in boarding house fire. In 1941 he
would star in another early film noir, this time John Huston's crime thriller The Maltese Falcon as the sly Joel Cairo
opposite Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor and Sydney Greenstreet. Within the next
four years Greenstreet and Lorre would collaborate on nine films together. In
1942 he worked with Bogart and Greenstreet once again in the wartime romance Casablanca, playing the small but
important role of black-marketeer, Ugarte.

At this point in his career, Lorre was one of the popular
cultural icons of the Silver Screen. His silken voice, expressive eyes and
unique facial expressions quickly became the target of parody The Looney Tunes and other satirical
outlets. His onscreen persona of the subtle, yet sinister villain was also
solidified by the early 1940s, despite his wish to avoid typecasting. He
played the villain in films such as Background
to Danger and Passage to Marseillie before
taking a turn as the hero in 1944's The
Mask of Dimitrios. That same year he also displayed is unique blend of sinister
comedy in Frank Capra's surprisingly dark Arsenic
and Old Lace. Two years later, in 1946, he worked with Sidney Greenstreet
one last time for the Don Siegal film The
Verdict.

Post-War Decline

After the end of WWII, Lorre's career went into a fast
decline. In 1946 he was once again cast as the villain in two films, the first
being the noir piece Black Angel. The
second was the Robert Florey horror film The
Beast with Five Fingers. In 1947 he once again took a stab at comedy with a
supporting role in the film-noir spoof My
Favorite Brunette starring Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour and Lon Chaney JR. He next
year he co-starred in the forgettable crime/musical Casbah and followed that with the equally forgettable Rope of Sand. In 1950 he returned to
Germany to work on his pet project Der
Verlorene (The Lost One). The
film, written, directed, and starring Lorre, was an allegory about the
collective guilt of Germany due to its recent political past and crimes
committed by the Nazis. The film was failure in Germany and never made it to
American shores. Needless to say, it was an incredible disappointment for
Lorre. He soon after returned to the United States.

Later Career and Life

By the mid-1950s Lorre's health starred to slowly decline.
Because of this he spent more time in the medium of television than film He
made appearances in series such as Lux
Video Theatre, Suspense, The United States Steel Hour, and The Eddie Cantor Comedy Theater. Although
mostly seen on the small screen, Lorre made the occasional appearance on the
silver one in films such as Beat the
Devil, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and Around
the World in 80 Days. By the end of the decade much of Lorre's work
amounted rent-paying gigs, although he did prove he still had some of the manic
energy from yesteryear with the musical comedy Silk Stockings, in which he plays a singing/dancing Soviet
Commissar.

At the start of new decade, Lorre was given somewhat of a
career boost thanks to low-budget producer Roger Corman. He played upon Lorre's well-established sinister onscreen personal with films such as Tales of Terror, The Cask of Amontillado and
The Raven. In 1964 Lorre gave his
final performance in the Jerry Lewis vehicle The Patsy. Already facing ill health due to years of morphine
addicting, Lorre would not act again for the camera. Peter Lorre died of a
stroke on March 23rd, 1964. He was 59 years old.

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Lorre suggested to Harry Cohn of Columbia that they make a film version of Crime and Punishment (1935/I) with him in the role of Raskolnikov. Cohn agreed to the project if Lorre would agree to be loaned out to MGM for Mad Love (1935).